His involvement is kinda of curious though. Sure, the guy made a splash at 2005 Sundance with a film called "One Last Dance." And he's supposed to be a great visionary director ala Zach Synder from "300."

BUT, he also directed the super-influential reality hit, QUEER EYE FOR THE STRAIGHT GUY!

Look, I'm not discounting Makowski's credentials! He may be a truly great visionary director. But he better do a great job adapting "Voltron" for the big screen, because handling 5 loveable queer folks is completely diffeent from helming a big-screen "Voltron" battle!

The movie begins in the Star Trek present - some time in the The Next Generation timeline. Romulans head back in time, either to kill Kirk or his father (or both, just to be safe. This is known as "The Terminator Gambit") and Spock follows them into the past, back when the Enterprise crew were young. These events change the history of the Trek universe, either creating a parallel timeline that the films will now follow or simply overwriting everything else that we know as Trek history.

Wow, it's very "Terminator-ish," but it's a bit clever. Director J.J. Abrams will have a fun time connecting the past with the present and onward to the future. Exciting!

“I love ‘Guitar Hero’ and I think it’s a part of pop culture. I would love to do a ‘Guitar Hero’ movie, if Activision would ever let me. I’m trying to convince them, but why would you have a movie screw up such a huge franchise? Not that I would make a bad movie. So that would be cool, to do a ‘Guitar Hero’ movie. ”

You know the drill. You sit down, armed with buttery popcorn, and you're assaulted with mega trailers first (don't get me wrong, I love watching trailers, sometimes, it's the best part of your movie-watching experience), then fade to black.

You see the familiar studio logo.

You think the movie is about to begin.

But wait...there's more!

And more.

And more!

By the time the movie finally begins, you've sat through watching 6 or 8 or 10 movie studio logos!

What gives?

There's a great article here examining our current "movie logo" culture. Read, and weep, until the next time you're in your favorite multiplex only to experience movie-logo watching over and over and over again.